Children could be "banded" into ability groups by continuous testing in primary school, under plans to reform the contentious 11-plus system in Kent.

Such a model would ensure that throughout their child's school career, parents had clear information about their academic performance

Consultation document

Kent - the biggest remaining area of selective secondary education in England - feels forced to act because of a series of rulings by the independent national admissions adjudicator.

New legislation also obliges all authorities to co-ordinate admissions procedures within their areas.

So the Conservative-run education authority is considering using progress tests for primary pupils "to determine a child's suitability for entry to a grammar school".

Campaigners for comprehensive education say it would simply replace one unfair system with another.

Need to get agreement

The Education Act 2002 requires education authorities to co-ordinate and get agreement on the admission arrangements for all maintained schools in their area.

So Kent must get agreement by 31 March 2003 for a scheme starting in September 2004, otherwise the education secretary could use new powers to impose a solution.

Under the proposals just published for consultation, Kent says it does not aim to replace the 11-plus with continuous assessment by then, but wants people's views on the principle of changing.

It says a lot of testing is done in primary schools already, and this could be standardised.

"Such a model would ensure that throughout their child's school career, parents had clear information about their academic performance, how it related to the profile of performance of all Kent pupils and whether the child was exceeding expectations or otherwise," it says.

"This information would help parents make informed choices for their child's secondary education as well as allowing them to support their child more fully in school."

'Appalling'

The data could be used to put children into ability bands - it suggests there might be four of these - in a process it calls "fair banding".

Can you imagine the bureaucratic nightmare that it would create?

Anti-selection campaigner Martin Frey

The head teachers and officials who came up with the proposals felt "no community or community of schools is served well by having a mainstream secondary school that almost entirely provides education to pupils of below average ability".

Banding might tackle this by obliging schools to take a cross-section of pupils from the ability bands, reflecting the proportions from each band which had applied for admission.